Jordan Peele has proven himself one of the most fascinating writer-directors working today â€” not just in the horror genre, but in general. His presence behind the camera now guarantees my interest.

Us, Peeleâ€™s mesmerizing, terrifying follow-up to his Oscar-winning hit Get Out, shows that the social-horror sensibility that animated that film was no fluke. This is, among other things, a thriller that (like last weekâ€™s The Perfection) is powered by surprise and its willingness to cross genre boundaries, so itâ€™s another one whose plot is difficult to write about â€” though the plot isnâ€™t the main reason Us gets under our skin, in any case. Itâ€™s the primal punch of the images and moods that the plot makes possible. For instance, how can I explain how hilarious and horrific the use of NWAâ€™s â€śFuck tha Policeâ€ť is here? Itâ€™s a joke at the expense of Siri/Alexa-type virtual assistants, but itâ€™s also a grim warning: For real, fuck the police, theyâ€™re not going to help you here, not in this weird new world informed as much by Hands Across America and Michael Jackson as by Kubrickâ€™s The Shining.

Has Jordan Peele ever read the snippet that Harlan Ellison once published from his unproduced The Whimper of Whipped Dogs script? Thereâ€™s an image near the beginning that makes me think he has â€” a girl drops her candy apple in the sand of a beach, where it sticks up as ominous night rain begins to patter onto it. I recalled Ellisonâ€™s image of a knife in the sand dappled by raindrops. Even if Peele wasnâ€™t influenced by this specific bit, it seems clear that heâ€™s drinking from the same intoxicating and frightening well of brutal visuals that filled/fueled Ellisonâ€™s imagination. Those visuals can help an artist try to make sense of violence, and in Us Peele summons hints and whispers of the uncanny in order to make sense of, and ultimately elicit sympathy for, its mostly inarticulate monsters.

The narrative begins simply, with a well-to-do family off to kick back in their summer house. Adelaide Wilson (Lupita Nyongâ€™o), the mother/wife of the family, seems to be the main protagonist by virtue of her introduction in the opening extended flashback as a little girl. She is grown now, and a bit skittish due to her experience in a strange beach funhouse, but essentially normal. So are her husband Gabe (Winston Duke) and their two kids Zora (Shahadi Wright Joseph) and Jason (Evan Alex). They all hang out at the Santa Cruz beach with their also-wealthy friends (Elisabeth Moss and Tim Heidecker) and their twin teenage daughters, and the subtext of familial violence expressed in ironic jokes begins to surface. One night, the Wilsons are trying to relax back at their summer house, and a quartet of menacingly silent figures appear outside.

If Peeleâ€™s subversive narrative style has an Achillesâ€™ heel, itâ€™s that after Get Out we know to notice, and file away for future scrutiny, any number of visual, aural, or thematic Easter eggs. When a character turns up holding a sign referring to Jeremiah 11:11, and when another character not only notices that a clock reads 11:11 but calls attention to it, we know weâ€™re meant to look up the Biblical quote on our phones in the parking lot after the movie. (Amusingly, when you google the line now, you get back a bunch of images from Us.) Iâ€™ll let you have fun with the passage, with its intimations of evil and the wrath of the Old Testament God, and what it could possibly have to do with a story that makes room for paper people chains, Minnie Riperton, rabbits, Lucas/Spielberg nods, and the discontents of what used to be called (and in the context of this movie is a perfectly appropriate descriptor) â€śthe underclass.â€ť

The wounded-seeming Nyongâ€™o plays victim and victimizer with equal conviction and facility, and Winston Duke, whom Iâ€™d only seen before as the sardonic, intimidating warrior Mâ€™Baku in Black Panther, is something of a revelation here as the much less at-ease-with-violence Gabe, whom Peele almost seems to have molded in his literal image. (When Gabe is forced to grab a baseball bat and warn the interlopers away, Duke gives us the attitude with a subtle undercurrent of self-doubt.) Thereâ€™s twinning all over the movie, including a real spider crawling out from underneath a toy spider, and thereâ€™s Elisabeth Moss at her stark raving scariest, staring in a mirror and rendering her face incarnadine in more ways than one (she seems ready for a David Lynch movie). The movie is spooky as hell, dealing hard and fast from a thick deck of symbolist cards, and ultimately Peele offers it as a suggestion to think about what society and prosperity are built on. It is brilliant and timely and more than a little insane in its everything-ties-together narrative sanity, which the movie also comments on.

I have no idea where the actual hell Peele intends to go from here, but wherever it is, he has my eager permission to go there and report on his findings.